Our Savior’s, Moorhead
Advent 1/December 4, 2013
Isaiah 2:1-5; Romans 13:11-14; Matthew 24:36-44
In the name of Jesus. Amen.
Let's start at
the very beginning/
A very good
place to start/When you read you begin with ABC/
When you sing you begin with do re mi/….
Starting
at the beginning sure makes sense, doesn’t it?
Most of the time we begin at the beginning.
Except
that in the peculiar logic of the church--where the last is first and the first
is last-- we tell time differently. Our
song, if we had one, would be: “Let’s start at the very ENDING…”
Let’s
begin this new year on the church’s calendar by zooming way ahead, to the final
future, the destination toward which we’re heading.
Truth
be told, part of me is always a little annoyed when Advent begins, because someone
decided, long ago, that we can’t just jump into Christmas, as much as we might
like to…
We’re
not allowed simply to get out all the warm fuzzy holiday stuff from the boxes
in the crawl spaces, where we’ve squirreled it all away from last year….
Instead
of jumping into the “hap, happiest time of the year”….we need to warm up to it,
to place Christmas in the broadest possible context so that it will hit us with
full force.
Let’s
start at the very ENDING….let’s begin our waiting for the Christ Child by
remembering where this is all heading, where God is moving us, toward the consummation
of all that God has been, still is and will yet be doing in the remainder of our
journey here on earth.
So
in this first week of Advent we focus on the End of this world as we know
it…because (like a fine engagement ring) only a setting that encompassing can
hold the diamond of Christ’s first coming to us, in Bethlehem’s manger, with
Mary and Joseph and angels and shepherds all standing there slack-jawed.
Let’s
start at the very Ending, a very good place to start. Because starting at the Ending reminds us
that our God finishes what he starts.
That’s
what we confess, week after week, when we wrap up the second article of the
Creed by saying that Jesus the Son of God will come to judge the living and the
dead. Jesus came as a Baby…Jesus keeps
coming in water, Word, bread, wine and community…and Jesus will come again, one
last time, because God finishes what God starts.
And
even though that promise sounds a little different each time we hear it in the
scriptures, it all boils down to this: God is making all things New--so get used to the notion that the current state
of affairs will not be the final state of affairs.
So
for old Israel, to whom Isaiah prophesied, for old Israel which was forever
being run over roughshod by neighboring, conquering nations whom God used time
and again to chasten his wayward people…
For
old Israel, as Isaiah pictures it, the time will come when the Temple mount in
Jerusalem will be raised up as the highest of all mountains, God’s own Mt.
Everest….and the nations will no longer be God’s means of chastening Israel for
its failure to measure up to God’s standard of justice.
No,
the nations will not always be arrayed against old Israel, but rather when
Mount Zion becomes the highest of the mountains, the nations will take notice
and say to themselves: "Come, let us go up to the mountain of
the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and
that we may walk in his paths."
That’s
one of the Bible’s images for it—one way of picturing what we know to be
true: that God is going to finish what
God has started…..and that all the people who dwell on this old ball of mud
will one day recycle all their weapons into gardening tools, when “Waging War
101” will no longer be part of the curriculum, when God’s encompassing peace,
God’s shimmering justice will be all in all.
So
as another Advent rolls around, we begin at the ending….our scripture lessons
all focusing on “the Day of the Lord”…
….and
with that always comes a rub. Because
if we believe Jesus will come again, one last time, we curious cats want a
timetable—we hanker for the when, the where and the how of God’s final future.
In
short, whenever we talk about Jesus’ final coming, we want God to dish out the
details, because we forget how much the End of all things is like the Beginning
of all things—an article of faith, not a piece of forensic evidence we can dissect
in a laboratory.
So,
we confess that God is going to wrap it all up….but then we get distracted by
our own curiosity about the “mechanics” of all that…..so God has to remind us about
the folly of speculation.
Martin
Luther was once asked what God was doing the day before God created the world….
….to
which Luther, with a wry twinkle in his eye, responded: God was cutting hickory
switches to thrash foolish persons who ask questions like that!
So
right alongside all the diverse ways the Bible talks about the End of all
things….in the very same verses, the Bible holds at arm’s length all our “curious
cat” questions about how and when and where it will happen.
Our
gospel lesson from Matthew 24 is as blunt as any of them: “"But
about that day and hour no one knows, neither the angels of heaven, nor the
Son, but only the Father.”
Amazing! Not even the Son of God knows when he’ll return
one last time to earth.
That’s
God’s business. And if any TV preacher
tries to tell you otherwise I urge you to flip the channel!
It’s
God’s business—to wrap it all up, to finish the job. It’s God’s business—how and when and where
that will happen.
And
if all of that is God’s business, what’s left for us? What’s our business?
Here’s
where these end-of-the-world Bible texts get really interesting.
Because
just at the point where you’d think the veil might be drawn back and we’d learn
a few juicy secrets about Judgment Day….these end-of-the-world passages divert
us from God’s business and point our little noses back into what’s our
business.
And
our business, my friends, is how we will live in the mean time…in between
Christ’s first coming and Christ’s final coming.
How now shall we
live? The Bible stubbornly
keeps dragging us back to that question which is really the only question that
matters.
And
here’s what we’re told about our business…
From
Isaiah—“Come, let us walk in the light of
the Lord.”
From
the Apostle Paul—“Wake from your sleep…
lay aside the works of darkness…put on the armor of light”
And
from our Lord Jesus himself—“Keep awake
therefore, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming….be ready, for
the Son of Man is coming at an unexpected hour.”
Martin
Luther advised Christians to live each
day as though Jesus died this morning, rose this afternoon and is returning to
earth this evening.
When
we put it that way, we see how in Jesus Christ every day is “charged” with the prospect
of God’s promised future. Every day spills
over with the energy of God’s eternity.
Every day anticipates all that God has in store for us.
So
we lean into God’s future, as if that future was already here, present, right
now.
You
and I are, in a sense, “from the future”—God’s final future. We know how the story ends. We audaciously believe that we can start
living now as if God’s future had already arrived.
So
if in the fullness of time oppression will be a thing of the past, we can live
today daring to believe that justice will win out.
If
in God’s final future war will be no more, we can live today as if peace will
actually win out.
If
in God’s great tomorrow there will be no more cryin’ and no more dyin’, we can
live today, inhabiting life with no limits, no dead zones in our path.
If
in God’s coming Kingdom there will be a place-card for everyone, we can live
today as if hospitality was the kindest gift we could ever offer to others.
If
in God’s New Creation the word “scarcity” will be banished from our vocabulary,
we can live today as if abundance is already overflowing.
If
in God’s dawning day Christ will be all and in all, we can live now as if Jesus
is already in charge, exercising his strong but gentle rule over all things,
starting with you and me.
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
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